Cispius Mons

p120
Article on pp120 of

Cispius Mons:
the northern spur of the Esquiline hill, separated from the
Oppius
on the south by the valley of the
Subura, and from the
Viminal
on the north by the corresponding depression through which ran the
vicus Patricius
(Varro, LL V.50;
Gell. XV.1.2; Mon. L. XV.784‑5). The beginning of the Cispius, the point where it projected south-westward from the plateau of the Esquiline is now marked by S. Maria Maggiore, where the altitude is about 54 metres. The Cispius, the Oppius, and the
Fagutal
were the three parts of the Esquiline, and constituted three of the montes of the
Septimontium(q.v.)
(Fest. 341, 348). According to Varro (ap. Fest. 348) Cispius was a native of Anagni who came to Rome in the reign of Tullius and guarded this hill (Jord. I.1.183‑188; DEII.2161‑2162).

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